Carsten told SwimSwam that while down under, he joined an elite lifting club, and to stay in shape for swimming mostly participated in recreational water activities such as intramural water polo and surfing

Austin Katz became the first high school Class of 2017 grad to win an individual NCAA title, and more than half of our top-20-ranked recruits scored significant points at the 2018 NCAA Championships as freshmen.

200 Butterfly

After winning back-to-back 200 fly titles in his freshman and sophomore seasons, Texas Longhorn Joseph Schooling relinquished his crown to teammate Jack Conger last year. Along with losing his 100 fly title to former Bolles teammate Caeleb Dressel, Schooling missed the 200 fly final by a mile, placing 37th out of 41 swimmers.

There were several reasons for the performance, with Schooling sighting a lack of motivation after winning Olympic gold and dealing with a stomach virus throughout the meet. During the summer he lost to Dressel again in the 100 fly, settling for bronze at World’s, giving him even more motivation heading into his final collegiate season.

Heading into NCAAs last season the 22-year-old had only swum the 200 fly at three different meets, and the lack of preparation showed. This time around he’s done it seven times, five of which were faster than his 1:45.47 from last season’s NCAAs. He’s put in the work and is ready to execute. His in-season times are similar to those done in his first two years, with a season best of 1:40.72 from the Texas Invite putting him 4th in the country. He’s looking good to get back down to his 2016 best of 1:37.97, and will look to take down Conger’s NCAA and U.S. Open Record of 1:37.35.

Perhaps Schooling’s biggest obstacle back to the title is his Singaporean countryman Zheng Quah, who was the runner-up last year in his freshman season in a very impressive 1:38.83. Already 1:40 twice this season, he’s setting up to be right around where he was last year. The question is, can Schooling go better than that? We’ll find out.

The only swimmer sitting above the Cal sophomore in the rankings this year is Indiana’s Vini Lanza, the lone man sub-1:40. The Brazilian native had a breakout performance at the Big Ten Championships, winning seven gold medals and earning personal best times in all three of his individual events. In the 200 fly he hit 1:39.95, a full second under his best from the year prior. The question with him is, after adding from Big Ten’s to NCAAs in every event last season, can he turn it around and improve this time around? If he can get under 1:40 again he should be in the top three.

Bentz, a senior, sustained a broken collarbone in October which kept him out of the mix for the majority of the year. After sub-par swims at the SEC Championships and an NCAA invite in question, he threw down a 8th-ranked 1:40.97 200 fly to ensure his spot (as it turns out, if he didn’t swim that race, his previous season-best of 1:42.51 from a dual meet against Emory would’ve been .01 under the invite time). If he pulled out all the stops to ensure the invite, does he have any more time in him this year? After the injury it’s hard to tell. This event in particular will be an absolute war in the morning to get an A-final spot (seeds 4 through 21 are separated by less than a second), and if he can get there, he has a shot to get in the top-3 like he did last year (he was 3rd in an all-time best of 1:40.07). He’s produced some big swims with his back against the wall before, such as making the Olympic 800 free relay team in 2016, and can’t be counted out.

Vazaios, a junior from Greece who was the 2016 European 200 IM champion, came within a few tenths of his lifetime best at the Ohio State Invite in November (1:41.07), and then swam a time nearly identical to last year at the ACC Championships (1:41.35). He projects to be one of those going 1:40-something, but has the potential to get down into the 1:39s. The same goes for Wright, a senior, who broke 1:41 for the first time at NCAAs last year to place 7th, and then notched a personal best of 1:40.57 in December. Vazaios dropped .65 seconds from his seed time to his prelims time at NCAAs last year and Wright dropped half-a-second. That leaves us feeling good about both swimmers’ abilities to drop enough to get into the A-Final. Wright dropped again in finals in 2017 though, so we bumped him ahead of Vazaios on that basis.

The other two men sub-1:41 this season are Texas freshman Sam Pomajevich and Ohio State sophomore Noah Lense. Pomajevich, known to swim very well with a taper, lowered his best time by a second at the Texas Invite in 1:40.82. Longhorn coach Eddie Reese has proven to be one of the best coaches at getting the taper right for this meet, and Pomajevich is certainly a threat to the likes of Lanza, Vazaios and Wright if he’s on. Lense earned a big best at Big Ten’s in his freshman year, but was a DFS at NCAAs after coming in with a time that would’ve placed him 9th. Now a bit faster at 1:40.83, he’s in the mix for an A-final.

Of note: this could be a big swing event if the team scoring winds up being as tight as we think it will be. Texas has the #4 and #6 seeds coming in, while Cal has the #2, #10, #14, and #21 seeds. This will be a crucial event, and if Cal can somehow sneak into a 2-up, 2-down here, in an event that comes very late in the meet, it could leave them within striking distance when the 400 free relays take to the pool.

Darkhorse: Jack Saunderson of Towson qualified for NCAAs last year with a 1:43.05 in this event, and then dropped more than a second to qualify for the B-Final with a 1:41.84. While he added that time all back in finals, he enters this year with a lifetime-best as his seed in 1:41.69. If Towson has hit his taper right again, and he drops another second, he would be crashing the A-Final as one of only 2 mid-major invitees in this event.

Nothing against Quah, but if Schooling has been training seriously this year, I don’t think there’s any way he loses. Kid is a killer racer, so if the fitness is there, no one is beating him in this race.

Vote Up44-9Vote Down Reply

10 months ago

Hswimmer

Schooling ain’t got nothing on this field

Vote Up5-23Vote Down Reply

10 months ago

A non-e mouse

You guys are sleeping on Noah Lense. Kids the real deal

Vote Up14-10Vote Down Reply

10 months ago

Caleb

he’s got a great shot at the A-final but this is a deep event, hard to pick him over the guys listed. Maybe a toss-up with Albiero.

Vote Up0-1Vote Down Reply

10 months ago

About James Sutherland

James formerly competed for the Laurentian Voyageurs in Sudbury, Ontario, specializing in the 200 free, back and IM. He finished up his collegiate swimming career in February of 2018, placing 11th at the OUA Championships in the 200 IM, and graduated with a bachelor's degree in economics in May. He …